Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to header Skip to footer
All columns & sections

Poems

Inspirational verse submitted by readers.

"What hast thou in the house?"

Supply is oneness with the fountainhead. Streams stagnate only for the want of flow.

The Eternal Now

Youth may look forward, age look vainly back, But mortal dreams misrepresent the fact Concealed by calendar and almanac— That man is now harmonious and intact. And it is now we truly live and move In Spirit's secret place, secure and free, Where evil cannot penetrate, and Love Is all there is, now and eternally.

Immortal Crowning

He said hard things, and they left him then; That way they would not tread. He who had healed at the close of day Said hard things, and they went away; For he would not take their mortal crown, Who was the crowned of God.

Freedom Gained

One night with pain and fear I seemed molested; But then I saw That in God's law These were but lies that mortal mind suggested. They could not be, For man is free And lives where only goodness is attested.

Peace Prayer

O God , all-knowing and all-seeing, whose love established man in being, whose knowledge patterned brotherhood, who sees creation "very good," we turn from pictures, in this hour, which testify of evil power, and trust in Thine omnipotence to free our hearts from turbulence. Thou art our God.

Fulfillment

Oh , let me not believe that sands run out Or that late-blooming trees may set no fruit; Deliver me from paralyzing doubt When inspiration wakes a voice long mute. Let me not think that all the myriad Steps to perfection are too hard, too long, Or that time's inexorable period Must end abruptly unperfected song.

Joy in Our Hearts

The paths and fields of Galilee were filled With lovely flowers. The birds sang merrily.

In Thy Light We Shall See Light

There is a line so fine one might despair of tracing it in stress of circumstance: dividing as it does what may appear not poles apart—not fact and fallacy— but truth and counterfeit so cunning-matched that even an eye well practiced in the art of severing what is true from what is not may be deceived. And find, too late, it has been tricked by skill of forgery.

Release

Now let affection's ardency unseal The frozen fountains of the human heart. No more let cold self-centeredness congeal Impulses which, reluctant at the start, Yet having started, in resistless streams Pour forth their richness into all the world.

The Promise

For you—is the tide far out And the look of life A half day's sighing into night? Be comforted. The promise is for you.